2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.crm.2019.100203
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Effect of agroclimatic variability on land suitability for cultivating rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) and growth performance assessment in the tropical rainforest climate of Peninsular Malaysia

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Cited by 21 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Strains from the Malaysian lineage were all isolated from Bertram palms ( Eugeissona tristis ) located in the Malaysian rainforest [ 19 ]. The Malaysian rainforest is hot and humid, with an average temperature of 26–28 °C [ 71 ], so perhaps these strains have adapted to hotter climes. Most recent evidence on the Malaysian population suggests that these strains may be admixed and contain genetic material from North American and Japanese oak lineages [ 72 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Strains from the Malaysian lineage were all isolated from Bertram palms ( Eugeissona tristis ) located in the Malaysian rainforest [ 19 ]. The Malaysian rainforest is hot and humid, with an average temperature of 26–28 °C [ 71 ], so perhaps these strains have adapted to hotter climes. Most recent evidence on the Malaysian population suggests that these strains may be admixed and contain genetic material from North American and Japanese oak lineages [ 72 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Growth and development of plant are controlled by both genetic and environment factors so does the rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis). Because of widely used in some industry inputs, the research on effect of booth factors have been conducted exhaustively to increase the latex productivity and quality [1 -4], and so did [5] reported their research on the roles of genetic factor on the latex productivity of some types of clonal resulted from the previous breeding. As for the extensive of research environmental effect on rubber growth and latex productivity can be referenced the work reported by [6] especially for climate factors (air temperature and rainfall) in relation to land suitability, [7] for soil fertility and management etc.…”
Section: Research Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Maximum consumption of natural rubber has been reported in the tires of automobiles, which utilizes ~70% of the total production, and its demand has been predicted to increase by 30 megatons per year by the year 2030 (Cornish, 2017). The para rubber planting area is rapidly expanding into the Montane Mainland Southeast Asia including Grate Mekong Subregion (China, Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia) (Golbon et al, 2018;Yang et al, 2019) and Peninsular Malaysia (Hazir et al, 2020).…”
Section: Academicpresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Elite clones of para rubber with high yield of latex, rapid growth, longlifetime tapping (20-30 years) and disease-resistant traits being developed through breeding programs (Supriya et al, 2019). Rootstock grafting with elite scion genotype is a common protocol to generate master stock of para rubber for small holder farmers in both Thailand (>85% of the total area; Chantuma et al, 2011) and Malaysia (>93% of the total area; Hazir et al, 2020), which are the major plantation areas. Recently, the limitation of cross-talking (grafting efficiency) between rootstock and scion has been found to significantly affect the latex yield and growth rate of scion (Gonçalves and Martins, 2002;Cardinal et al, 2007;Yao et al, 2017) and to induce DNA methylation (epigenetic changes) in heterografted plants (Uthup et al, 2018).…”
Section: Academicpresmentioning
confidence: 99%